@idjaw pretty good, thanks. introducing javascript slowed things down as I worked on the frontend -- trusting in JS to not mess up and to render components was a bit of a... thing to get used to (needed for some of the 'real-time' updates and for eventual react native), but slow and steady process. deployment model is "done" and the backend choices have made the new feature additions straightforward (if not a bit onerous)
user559633
i have a couple of performance-benchmarks lines in the sand that i'm starting to approach, but the story of this week is to get initial state to my form components/divs.
user559633
(relevant lines in the sand are <500kb payload for initial landing cost, <1s from typical connection to DOM/interaction ready, 0 db queries for initial index load)
user559633
React is really what threw a wrench into that. I'm trying to pick one framework/model and just stick with it, but react + react router + react dom is 350kb minified
I attribute huge page sizes to two things: 1) ad networks/data analytics systems that are incentivized to push a whole lot of junk to/from the user's machine; 2) increasingly many layers of abstraction that take the developer away from the metal and introduce bloat at each level
Maybe this is a grass is greener thing. But this seems like a fun/interesting problem to solve. Considering that I am very far removed from any js or front-end development right now.
user559633
Yeah -- the latter is really what I've been finding surprising. For 7 front-end JS modules, the "most approved" workflow brought in 238 dependencies
There isn't really a happy shiny solution for either one. If you want to monetize, ads are a logical choice; and if you want a site of nontrivial complexity, high-level systems are a logical choice.
I expect optimizing for space will gain true mainstream traction if/when consumer-level bandwidth stops increasing every N months.
You're adding an answer, because you can't comment. But you're answering...what I already wrote in a comment. So if you would be able to comment, would you have added a comment which says the same thing as mine?:D — Andras Deak22 secs ago
@JRichardSnape It's fine, @Zero is coming home to take over.
You know...I've never seen Corbyn and Zero in the same room...and right when the EU referendum was finishing up, Zero came back to us saying he wasn't as busy anymore...
cv-pls "how do I transpose with numpy but I don't know it's called transpose" -- stackoverflow.com/q/38086005/5067311 (I'm not sure I found the best dupe, I didn't search for long)
why not, you get random from 1 to 30*10^6 and then you chose a number lets say 27.6959*10^6 and if that number ever is generated you exit program, otthervise print one
that program would be such fun
and that really is not using any faults in language by the way